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Uncle Sam 4K Ultra HD

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Arrives Tuesday, May 7
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Description

THE STAR-SPANGLED SHOCKER FROM THE CREATORS OF MANIAC COPIt's Fourth Of July Weekend, and the recently discovered corpse of Sgt. Sam Harper - killed by 'friendly fire' during the first Gulf War - is returned to his all-American hometown. But when Sam rises from the dead to punish the unpatriotic, only his young nephew and a bitter Korean War veteran (Academy Award winner + Grammy Award winner Isaac Hayes of SHAFT and SOUTH PARK fame) can stop his red-blooded rampage. Draft dodgers, tax cheats, crooked politicians and flag-burners beware: Uncle Sam wants you... DEAD!Timothy Bottoms (THE LAST PICTURE SHOW), Bo Hopkins (THE WILD BUNCH), William Smith (FAST COMPANY), P.J. Soles (HALLOWEEN, CARRIE) and Academy Award ® nominee Robert Forster (JACKIE BROWN) co-star in this zombie horror hit directed by William Lustig (MANIAC, RELENTLESS) and written by Larry Cohen (GOD TOLD ME TO, THE STUFF). Now Blue Underground is thrilled to present UNCLE SAM in a sparkling new 25th Anniversary restoration, scanned in 4K 16-bit from the original 35mm negative, with Dolby Vision HDR and Dolby Atmos audio, loaded with illuminating Extras!SPECIAL FEATURES4K Ultra HD Disc (2160p) Widescreen 2.40:1 feature presentationAudio: Dolby Atmos (English); 5.1 DTS-HD (English) Subtitles: English SDH, Francais, EspanolAudio Commentary 1 with Director William Lustig, Writer Larry Cohen and Producer George G. BraunsteinAudio Commentary 2 with Director William Lustig and Star Isaac HayesFire Stunts with Audio Commentary by Stunt Coordinator Spiro RazatosDeleted SceneGag ReelTheatrical TrailerPoster & Still Gallery Review A Unique Ride For Horror Fans! --All Movie GuideAn Entertaining Film… Lustig keeps the action moving, with convincing special effects and stuntwork and a fun supporting cast of character actors! --TV GuideScary, Silly Fun… A Damn Fine Fright Flick! --DVD Verdict


MPAA rating ‏ : ‎ R (Restricted)


Package Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.73 x 5.35 x 0.67 inches; 5.92 Ounces


Director ‏ : ‎ William Lustig


Media Format ‏ : ‎ Anamorphic, NTSC, Widescreen, Surround Sound


Run time ‏ : ‎ 1 hour and 29 minutes


Release date ‏ : ‎ June 21, 2022


Actors ‏ : ‎ Robert Forster, P.J. Soles, Timothy Bottoms, Isaac Hayes, Bo Hopkins


Studio ‏ : ‎ Blue Underground


Country of Origin ‏ : ‎ USA


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Independence Day of Terror
Uncle Sam, a movie about an army soldier who comes back from the dead and goes on a killing spree dressed as Uncle Sam on the 4th of July. Where do I start? Ok, first the acting. While most of the acting for the main characters is good, especially for Isaac "Chef" Hayes who does an excellent job as Jed, but some of the minor one/off characters was pretty bad, but it really isn't that distracting. Second, most of the death scenes are either off screen or just cut to the end of said death, I guess they blew most of the budget on the explosions (haha get it ?!). Third, the movie is kind of disrespectful to the armed forces. I'm not the right kind of person to be talking about both sides of war and peace, but the way the movie represents the army is not ok. Having the villain be a soldier who enlisted because he was a psychopath who loved killing, the army trying to cover an incident of friendly fire, and a former soldier saying that you shouldn't enlist in the armed forces because wars today aren't what they used to be is pretty dirty. If you can ignore that and just focus on some good old fashion blood and guts, then this will be an ok movie to watch. Though I'm pretty disappointed that Isaac Hayes didn't say "Hello there children!" Also it's never explained how Sam came back from the dead...so, whatever. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 24, 2018 by Fryzilla: King of the Monsters

  • Average Independence Day Themed Horror Film For Comedy Horror Fans
Somewhere in Kuwait during the Gulf War, a military unit uncovers and inspects an American helicopter that was accidentally shot down as a result of friendly fire. During the inspection, they find Master Sergeant Sam Harper's extra crispy, burnt, dying body, who springs to life and during his last breaths, kills a sergeant and major out of revenge before dying. Weeks later, days before July 4th weekend, Sam's body is shipped back to the US to his family's home in Twin Rivers, New Jersey. His wife, Louise receives the casket containing his remains but upon discovering there's new room in her house for it, allows his sister, Sally to keep it who lives with her patriotic son, Jody. In addition to being pro-American, he also looked up to Sam as a role model, not knowing that Sam was a degenerative alcoholic who abused his wife and sister. And Jody absolutely hates it when anyone says anything negative about Sam, America, or war. At midnight on July 4th, some degenerative teens are creeping around the graveyard, find an American flag and light it on fire. Some of the flames from the fire touch on Sam's empty grave, triggering Sam's corpse from within the casket to resurrect. Sam moves through the night and first kills some teenage kid in an Uncle Sam outfit and takes the outfit before. The following afternoon on Independence Day at the town's local 4th of July picnic, Sam goes on a killing spree, killing anyone that crosses his path or who he sees as unpatriotic. With the body count quickly rising, young Jody learns the truth about who his uncle Sam (no pun intended) really was and his views of him change immediately. Because Jody has some sort of weird trance over Sam, he's aided by Sam's former commander, Jed to put down the sadistic, zombified Uncle Sam Overall: There have been horror movies made about Christmas, Halloween, Thanksgiving, New Years Eve, and now...Independence Day. I'd been wanting to see Uncle Sam to see what it was like so I gave it a watch this 4th of July. It's an okay film but it's not horribly bad. I suppose some better plotting could've gone into the movie. You're telling me that a man's only purpose--who fried to death over accidental gunfire in the war; for coming back to life is to kill off some people in a small town that you feel don't appreciate the country?? I don't buy it. Perhaps the biggest plot hole of all that I want answered in this movie is why there kids are in school in July? Aren't schools out for the summer in July? And you can't possibly tell me that all those kids in there are part of summer school class. Also the first half of the film is spent with I'll give this film props for making the Uncle Sam villain in this look like a creep both masked and unmasked. I'm not sure if the director meant for this film to be serious or not because if he did, it turned out to be extremely comical as I highly doubt anyone that's ever watched this movie and will ever watch this movie, will take it seriously. Somehow despite the bunch load of flaws contained in this movie, I still found myself enjoying it to an extent. I'm not sure if it's because I have a knack for bad-good horror films or if I just love old school horror movies no matter how bad they are. Overall, I guess you could give this a watch to see if it fits your standards. If you want to give this a watch, I recommend renting this from Amazon first to see if it'll meet your expectations and go from there. I guess I've found my yearly Independence Day horror movie to watch ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 5, 2015 by Kane's Review

  • Must watch on July 4th
Never saw this before. The Blue Underground 4k looks incredible and the flick itself is awesome. Deadly serious vibe and great slow burn with a great creepy kid (I usually hate kids in horror flicks but this one is great). Took me by surprise how much I enjoyed it. Everyone is good but Isaac Hayes takes the cake. Great dialog and a terrific antidote to the usual military-men worship in so many flicks--expanding the 80s gross incompetent cop trope to capture Our Men in Uniform. Blue Underground continues to bat 1000. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 23, 2022 by Zach Sanderson

  • Cohen and Lustig return with a serious-themed picture that ends up being too jocular and routine for its own good...
Disappointingly violent but nonetheless creative film from the celluloid-engulfed pen of Larry Cohen tells the pointed but not entirely serious story of a combat soldier returned home in a coffin--but old Sam may not be ready to take that final plunge into the stomach of the Earth, leading to much confusion, much madness, and much murder (some killings of which are not entirely unjustified here, considering the story's content). Actual veterans may be slightly offended by it, and others may think that the film is simply too low in scale for their tastes, but essentially this is both a dark and funny movie (with a few gory after-kills and some brief female nudity thrown in) that could only have been dreamed up by the minds of both Cohen and director William Lustig. But I do agree with others that, on the whole, the film is disappointing. I have to confess that Lustig's "Maniac" was simply too anti-story for my taste, and while Cohen's script is more interested in narrative possibilities (a speech made by the Isaac Hayes character near the beginning is quite poignant really), this time there is simply a falling out of potential as the storyline progresses, as the movie continues to degenerate into a kind of slasher-movie-cum-revenge-story that is toying with the possibility of losing audience sympathy by the time it reaches its (rather predictable) conclusion. Larry Cohen may actually be weakening as a film writer, but he is far better than most mainstream screenwriters, even when he is at his most aloof--or rushed. Again, though, what makes the disc a keeper for me (and almost made me consider boosting the star count up to four) is the wonderful audio commentary track, which features Lustig, Cohen, and a couple of other guys who worked on the movie. They talk and talk (and at one point Cohen even does a swell impression of Humphrey Bogart--catch Cohen's intros to the TRAILERS FROM HELL series if you haven't already done so) and give many, many insights into the movie business and what it's like to produce a low-budget, cost-effective genre picture these days (as you may have predicted troops, the results ain't pretty, but at least there is a light of hope for aspiring and committed moviemakers who are serious about learning the requirements of these markets). Anyway, it is a great audio commentary recording for a movie that probably didn't deserve one this good. Also, Blue Underground's treatment is typically immaculate and stylized, offering great insert artwork and DVD cover art, terrific trailer galleries, and a very nice widescreen picture and digital sound transfer. It's very difficult to complain about their work, even though "Uncle Sam" was not the hidden gem that I was hoping it would be. C- ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 25, 2015 by Leslie Karen Rigsbey

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